Journal
JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN GERIATRICS SOCIETY
Volume 61, Issue 5, Pages 788-792Publisher
WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/jgs.12203
Keywords
urinary tract infection; emergency department; elderly
Categories
Funding
- Reynolds Foundation
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Objectives To determine how often older women presenting to an emergency department (ED) are diagnosed with a urinary tract infection (UTI) without a positive urine culture and to investigate whether collecting urine by catheterization instead of clean catch improves the accuracy of the urinalysis (UA). Design Retrospective chart review. Setting Academic-affiliated ED in Providence, Rhode Island. Participants One hundred fifty-three women aged 70 and older with diagnosis of UTI in the ED between December 1, 2008, and March 1, 2010. Measurements Chief complaint, review of systems, results of UA and culture, urine procurement (clean catch, straight catheter, or newly inserted Foley catheter), antibiotic administered or prescribed, and diagnosis. A confirmed UTI was defined as a positive urine culture, with microbial growth of 10,000 colony-forming units (CFU)/ mL or more for clean-catch specimens and 100CFU/mL or more for newly inserted catheter specimens; an ED diagnosis of UTI was defined as the designation by an ED physician. Results Of 153 individuals with an ED-diagnosed UTI, only 87 (57%) had confirmed UTI according to culture. Of the remaining 66 with negative cultures, 63 (95%) were administered or prescribed antibiotics in the ED. The method of urine procurement affected the ability of a UA to predict the culture result (P=.02), with catheterization yielding a lower proportion of false-positive UA (31%) than clean catch (48%). Conclusion Nearly half of older women diagnosed with a UTI in an ED setting did not have confirmatory findings on urine culture and were therefore inappropriately treated. Catheterization improved the accuracy of UA when assessing older women for possible UTI.
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